scholarly journals Mineralogie krupníkového tělesa v Medvědím dole u Koutů nad Desnou v Jeseníkách

Author(s):  
Jiří Zimák ◽  
Bohuslav Fojt ◽  
Zuzana Juránková

Soapstone bodies are relatively common in the Sobotín Massif in the Hrubý Jeseník Mts. (NE part of the Bohemian Massif). There was a small soapstone body found near Kouty nad Desnou in the northern spur of the Sobotín Massif composed dominately of amphibolites. The article focuses on mineralogy and petrology of this body and rocks in its surroundings (mainly hornblendite). Studied soapstone body is composed of these four types of rocks: i) talc schists with variable content of chlorite (clinochlore) and amphibole (actinolite, magnesiohornblende); ii) soapstone (mineral association talc + dolomite); iii) chlorite schist; iv) actinolite schist. Chromite is a typical accessory mineral of soapstone body rocks as well as hornblendite. This soapstone body does not show mineralogical and petrographical zonality typical for well-known soapstone bodies of the Sobotín Massif – former soapstone deposits Smrčina and Zadní Hutisko. However there is no mineralogical or petrographical difference between those deposits and studied soapstone body. Formation of the soapstone body at Kouty nad Desnou is probably connected to hydrothermal alteration of hornblendite running along shear zones.

2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (1-2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiří Zimák ◽  
Zuzana Juránková

The paper deals with mineralogy and petrology of a soapstone body at the locality Zadní Hutisko near Vernířovice in the Hrubý Jeseník Mts. (NE part of the Bohemian Massif). The soapstone body is located in the northern spur of the Sobotín Massif composed dominately of amphibolites. The soapstone body shows a very distinct symmetrical internal zonation. Four main types of rocks can be distinguished in the direction from the centre to the edge of the body: i) soapstone (talc + dolomite); ii) talc schist; iii) tremolite schist; iv) chlorite schist. Common accessory minerals of the rocks are apatite and magnetite. Formation of the studied soapstone body may have been caused by metasomatic alteration of peridotite (serpentinite). Epidote-chlorite granofels with a variable content of amphibole (magnesiohornblende or tschermakite) and with a high content of opaque ore minerals (magnetite, hematite, and also ilmenite) was found at the contact of the soapstone body with amphibolite. Epidote-chlorite granofels has been formed by alteration of amphibolite.


2017 ◽  
Vol 156 (3) ◽  
pp. 485-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRANTIŠEK VACEK ◽  
JIŘÍ ŽÁK

AbstractThe Ordovician to Middle Devonian Prague Basin, Bohemian Massif, represents the shallowest crust of the Variscan orogen corresponding toc.1–4 km palaeodepth. The basin was inverted and multiply deformed during the Late Devonian to early Carboniferous Variscan orogeny, and its structural inventory provides an intriguing record of complex geodynamic processes that led to growth and collapse of a Tibetan-type orogenic plateau. The northeastern part of the Prague Basin is a simple syncline cross-cut by reverse/thrust faults and represents a doubly vergent compressional fan accommodatingc.10–19 % ~NW–SE shortening, only minor syncline axis-parallel extension and significant crustal thickening. The compressional structures were locally overprinted by vertical shortening, kinematically compatible with ductile normal shear zones that exhumed deep crust in the orogen's interior atc. 346–337 Ma. On a larger scale, the deformation history of the Prague Syncline is consistent with building significant palaeoelevation during Variscan plate convergence. Based on a synthesis of finite deformation parameters observed across the upper crust in the centre of the Bohemian Massif, we argue for a differentiated within-plateau palaeotopography consisting of domains of local thickening alternating with topographic depressions over lateral extrusion zones. The plateau growth, involving such complex three-dimensional internal deformations, was terminated by its collapse driven by multiple interlinked processes including gravity, voluminous magma emplacement and thermal softening in the hinterland, and far-field plate-boundary forces resulting from the relative dextral motion of Gondwana and Laurussia.


1997 ◽  
Vol 134 (5) ◽  
pp. 727-739 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. ALEKSANDROWSKI ◽  
R. KRYZA ◽  
S. MAZUR ◽  
J. ŻABA

The still highly disputable terrane boundaries in the Sudetic segment of the Variscan belt mostly seem to follow major strike-slip faults and shear zones. Their kinematics, expected to place important constraints on the regional structural models, is discussed in some detail. The most conspicuous is the WNW–ESE Intra-Sudetic Fault Zone, separating several different structural units of the West Sudetes. It showed ductile dextral activity and, probably, displacement magnitude of the order of tens to hundreds kilometres, during late Devonian(?) to early Carboniferous times. In the late Carboniferous (to early Permian?), the sense of motion on the Intra-Sudetic Fault was reversed in a semi-brittle to brittle regime, with the left-lateral offset on the fault amounting to single kilometres. The north–south trending Niemcza and north-east–southwest Skrzynka shear zones are left-lateral, ductile features in the eastern part of the West Sudetes. Similarly oriented (northeast–southwest to NNE–SSW) regional size shear zones of as yet undetermined kinematics were discovered in boreholes under Cenozoic cover in the eastern part of the Sudetic foreland (the Niedźwiedź and Nysa-Brzeg shear zones). One of these is expected to represent the northern continuation of the major Stare Mesto Shear Zone in the Czech Republic, separating the geologically different units of the West and East Sudetes. The Rudawy Janowickie Metamorphic Unit, assumed in some reconstructions to comprise a mostly strike-slip terrane boundary, is characterized by ductile fabric developed in a thrusting regime, modified by a superimposed normal-slip extensional deformation. Thrusting-related deformational fabric was locally reoriented prior to the extensional event and shows present-day strike-slip kinematics in one of the sub-units. The Sudetic Boundary Fault, although prominent in the recent structure and topography of the region, was not active as a Variscan strike-slip fault zone. The reported data emphasize the importance of syn-orogenic strike-slip tectonics in the Sudetes. The recognized shear sense is compatible with a strike-slip model of the northeast margin of the Bohemian Massif, in which the Kaczawa and Góry Sowie Units underwent late Devonian–early Carboniferous southeastward long-distance displacement along the Intra-Sudetic Fault Zone from their hypothetical original position within the Northern Phyllite Zone and the Mid-German Crystalline High of the German Variscides, respectively, and were juxtaposed with units of different provenance southwest of the fault. The Intra-Sudetic Fault Zone, together with the Elbe Fault Zone further south, were subsequently cut in the east and their eastern segments were displaced and removed by the younger, early to late Carboniferous, NNE–SSW trending, transpressional Moldanubian–Stare Mesto Shear Zone.


1995 ◽  
Vol 248 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 97-116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Brandmayr ◽  
R.D. Dallmeyer ◽  
Robert Handler ◽  
Eckart Wallbrecher
Keyword(s):  

2007 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 21-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomas Næraa ◽  
Jens Konnerup-Madsen ◽  
Bjørn Hageskov ◽  
Lalu Prasad Paudel

The granites, phyllites, schists, and gneisses of the Dadeldhura Group exhibit a significant Himalayan metamorphic imprint. The rocks of the group constitute a synform and the group is delimited by thrusts. The North Dadeldhura Thrust (NDT) zone is dominated by granitic mylonite with subordinate quartzite, quartz-chlorite schist, and amphibolite. In the quartz-chlorite schist from the NDT zone, relict kyanite is observed, which together with recrystallisation textures in the granitic mylonite indicate that low-temperature syn-tectonic retrogression has affected the thrust zone. Prograde garnets with spiral structures from a zone 2–4 km structurally above the base of the NDT are associated with mylonite-like rocks, and indicate distinct prograde shear zones in this area. This suggested that prograde thrust stacking has affected about 4 km wide north belt of the Dadeldhura Group. Rim thermobarometry from the garnet holding rocks shows that the minerals were re-equilibrated at 440–550 °C and 6.5–9.5 kbar. In the southern part of the Dadeldhura Group, textures in quartz and feldspar from the Saukhark Granite-Gneiss indicate that temperatures during recrystallisation were around 450–550 °C. These P–T estimates suggest that most of the now exposed rocks in the Dadeldhura Group experienced prograde epidoteamphibolite facies metamorphism during early orogenic build up and thrusting of the Dadeldhura Nappe. A subsequent syntectonic retrograde phase is observed in the NDT zone as low temperature recrystallisation of quartz and feldspar in mylonitic rocks, and chlorite and quartz in chlorite-grade rocks holding relict kyanite. Retrograde trusting was also focused along a distinct “back thrusting” zone within the northern part of the group.


Solid Earth ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 2277-2301
Author(s):  
Andreas Eberts ◽  
Hamed Fazlikhani ◽  
Wolfgang Bauer ◽  
Harald Stollhofen ◽  
Helga de Wall ◽  
...  

Abstract. The exposed Variscan basement in central Europe is well-known for its complex structural and lithological architecture resulting from multiple deformation phases. We studied the southwestern margin of the Bohemian Massif, which is characterized by major and long-lived shear zones, such as the Pfahl and Danube shear zones, extending over > 100 km and initiated during Variscan tectonics. We integrated Bouguer gravity anomaly and lidar topographic data analyses and combined our results with available data and observations from low-temperature thermochronology, metamorphic grades, and the exposed granite inventory to detect patterns of basement block segmentation and differential exhumation. Three NW–SE-striking basement blocks are bordered by the Runding, Pfahl, and Danube shear zones from the northeast to the southwest. Basement block boundaries are indicated by abrupt changes in measured gravity patterns and metamorphic grades. By applying high-pass filters to gravity data in combination with lineament analysis, we identified a new NNW–SSE-striking tectonic structure (Cham Fault), which further segments known basement blocks. Basement blocks that are segmented by the Cham Fault differ in the abundance and spatial distribution of exposed late Variscan granites and are further characterized by variations in apparent thermochronological age data. Based on our observations and analyses, a differential exhumation and tectonic tilt model is proposed to explain the juxtaposition of different crustal levels. Block segmentation along the NW–SE-striking Pfahl and Runding shear zones most likely occurred prior, during, and after late orogenic granite emplacement at ca. 320 ± 10 Ma, as some of the granites are cross-cut by the shear zones, while others utilized these structures during magma ascent and emplacement. In contrast, activity and block segmentation along the Cham Fault occurred after granite emplacement as the fault sharply truncates the granite inventory. Our study provides evidence of intense and continuous fault activities during late and post-orogenic times and highlights the importance of tectonic structures in the exhumation and juxtaposition of different crustal levels and the creation of complex lithological patterns in orogenic terrains.


2004 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 474 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Papoulis ◽  
P. Tsolis-Katagas ◽  
C. Katagas

Zunyite [Ali3SÌ5C>2o(OH,F)i8CI], an extremely rare mineral, was found as an accessory mineral in highly altered rhyolitic rocks at Kefalos, southwestern Kos, and in a completely kaolinized rhyolitic dyke at Asfendiou, northeastern Kos. It is associated with dickite, kaolinite, quartz and minor pyrophyllite. Kos Island contains both Tertiary and Quaternary volcanic rocks. Zunyite has been identified by XRD and studied by SEM, EDS, Raman spectroscopy and FTIR spectroscopy. The presence of zunyite, in the highly altered samples is significant for the determination of the conditions of the hydrothermal alteration that took place. Zunyite crystals, are up to 90 pm in diameter but usually are less than 10 pm; the crystals are partly covered by kaolinite layers. EDX analyses on the surface of zunyite revealed AI2O3/S1O2 values raging from 2.6 to 2.7. The occurrence of zunyite suggests incorporation of hydrothermal fluids rich in F" and CI", thus indicating contamination by seawater


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